Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 28 Jan 1998, p. 4

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important investments: yours! Today‘s complicated economic and taxation environment requires all of us to conscientiously plan for our financial futures. Kevin Batlantyne and the resources of Levesque Securities, can help formulate and implement a plan to achieve your personal financial goals. Leverque Secunties. Poreni Compony is o subsdiary of The National Bank of Conado Investment Advisor Call today for a free copy of my Financial Planning Newsletter (519) 742â€"9418 180 King St. S., Sule 340, Waterloo C e se SECURITIES INC. * More thon 600 Investment Advisors KEVIN BALLANTYNE, C.A serving 250,000 Canadions * logrrated research the first Tuesday of May, August and November at the same time and location. If you require any additional information on the liaison committee, please contact Andy Campbell at 575â€"4777. The Regional Municipality of Waterloo has estabâ€" lished a landfill liaison committee for the Waterloo Landfill Site. All members of the public are invited to attend the committee meetings. The goal of the commitâ€" tee is to identify operational problems that affect local residents such as litter and noise and to resolve those issues in a cooperative manner. The next meeting of the liaison committee is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, February 3, 1998 at the Waterloo Landfill administration building, 925 Erb Street West, Waterloo. Subsequent meetings will be held quarterly on d "s';&?si 3i e 2 ® * *4 TCy * * _ OF WATERLOO | _ I A”ggâ€"fi seÂ¥ts; â€" PUBLIC NOTICE Sâ€"*" WATERLOO LANDFILL LIAISON COMMITTEE MEETING REGIONAL MUNICIPALTY Inclusion on the storm teams was strictly voluntary, but so many linesmen volunteered that names had to be pulled Snapshots from the storm Their adventure began when line superyisor Ray Behrendt took the morning call from Ontario Hydro. "They heard we could spare two crews. By 2:30 that afternoon the men were on the road." The meeting room at the Hydro offices on Northfield Dr. took on the air of a locker room at halfâ€"time as the men shuffled in after their shift. Jostling back and forth, like boys after a hockey game, they soon got down to semiâ€"seriousâ€" ness as they spoke about dealing with the ice storm‘s afterâ€" math. While the rest of us sat comfortably in our homes the past few weeks, two teams from Waterloo North Hydro travelled to the icy east to repair the lines and help turn the lights back on. Last week, one of the two teams returned from Winchester, (56 kms. south of Ottawa). 1 met members of the storm crew to talk about their experiences The Boys are back. The boys of Waterloo Nonhfllr"i’ydro that is. They look like runâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"mill vacation snapshots, but a closer look reveals images that are straight off the six o‘clock news: downed powerâ€"lines and iceâ€"heavy trees bowing onto a main road; a hydro linesman holding a cylinder of solid ice as thick as a tree truck. It can only mean one thing

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